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The Development of the Industrial United States

The Development of the Industrial United States. Overview. Thee development of the industrial United States. Were the Robber Barons Robbers or Barons? Your turn activity. The Development of the Industrial United States . Business Gets Big.

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The Development of the Industrial United States

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  1. The Development of the Industrial United States

  2. Overview • Thee development of the industrial United States. • Were the Robber Barons Robbers or Barons? • Your turn activity.

  3. The Development of the Industrial United States

  4. Business Gets Big • The United States economy changed dramatically in the period following the Civil War. • The average standard of living more than doubled between 1870 and 1910. • Business itself changed during this time. • Various ways were tried to increase the size of businesses, including corporations and trusts. Why were big businesses able to produce many kinds of goods and services more cheaply than small businesses?

  5. Incentives for Large-Scale Production • Business leaders made choices which involved high costs . • The profit motive was a powerful incentive. • The rules of the game - - business were permitted to keep all the profits they earned -- encouraged innovation in business. • Characteristics of Mass Production • Large number of units produced • Low cost per unit • Large amount of capital (plants and machines) • Coordinated work force (organized often in an assembly-line fashion) • Division of labor

  6. Economies of Scale • In manufacturing, economies of scale is the ability to reduce the average cost for each unit of production by spreading costs out over many units and over a long period of time.

  7. Fixed Costs, Variable Costs and Their Relationship to Cost per Unit 1. Fixed costs are costs that do not change when the number of units produced increases or decreases. • For most business firms, fixed costs include the following: • Capital • Utilities • Property taxes 2. Variable costs are costs that change when the number of units produced increases or decreases. For many business firms, variable costs include the following: • Labor • Raw materials 3. Total fixed costs + total variable costs = total cost. 4. Total cost divided by the number of units produced = cost per unit.

  8. Figuring the Costs: The Tomato Plant Weekly output = Total fixed cost = Variable cost per unit = Total variable cost = Total cost = Cost per unit = 100 cans of tomato soup $10,000 a week $.25 per can x 100 cans = $ 25 $10,025 $10,025 100 cans $100.20 What price would you need to charge? Will you sell any? Who benefits?

  9. Figuring the Costs: The Tomato Plant Weekly output = Total fixed cost = Variable cost per unit = Total variable cost = Total cost = Cost per unit = 1,000 cans of tomato soup $10,000 a week $.25 per can x 1,000 cans = $ 250 $10,250 $10,250 1,000 cans $10.25 What price would you need to charge? Will you sell any? Who benefits?

  10. Figuring the Costs: The Tomato Plant Weekly output = Total fixed cost = Variable cost per unit = Total variable cost = Total cost = Cost per unit = 25,000 cans of tomato soup $10,000 a week $.25 per can x 25,000 cans = $ 6,250 $16,250 $16,250 25,000 cans $.65 What price would you need to charge? Will you sell any? Who benefits?

  11. Andrew Carnegie and the American Steel Industry • Andrew Carnegie took advantage of mass production. • His motto: “watch costs and the profits take care of themselves.” • Large number of units produced • Low cost per unit • Large amount of capital • Coordinated work force • Division of labor

  12. John D. Rockefeller and the Oil Industry • When oil first oozed out of the ground in western Pennsylvania, it was regarded as a nuisance. • But by the 1880s, kerosene was used for lighting. • It replaced whale and coal oil as consumers’ indoor lighting fuel of choice. • Side Bar: Who most effectively saves whales: Adam Smith, Rockefeller, or PETA?

  13. John D. Rockefeller and the Oil Industry • John D. Rockefeller consolidated the oil industry. • He substituted tanker cars for barrels and later added pipelines. • He cut transportation costs with “sweetheart deals” with railroads. • He made Standard Oil into the dominant oil producer in the world.

  14. Henry Ford and the Automobile Industry • Henry Ford launched the manufacture of the modern automobile. • He combined using interchangeable parts and mass production to develop an assembly line for making cars. • This allowed more cars to be produced in less time and at lower costs. • Ford’s “break-out” year was 1908–1909 with the launch of the Model T. • Detroit became the “Motor City” because of Henry Ford.

  15. The Magic Marker Mark Factory

  16. Productivity Productively measures the amount of output (finished goods and services) produced relative to the inputs (productive resources) used. Productivity Output Input Labor productivity is relatively easy input to measure since we can measure wages and hours. Productivity Output Labor Hour

  17. Farm Productivity TrendsHours per Crop Table 24.2 Stanley Lebergott, The Americans: An Economic Record, 1984

  18. Productivity Gains in Percent Table 33.3 Stanley Lebergott, The Americans: An Economic Record, 1984

  19. The Production of Ford’s Model T

  20. Were the Robber Barons Robbers or Barons?

  21. Industrial Entrepreneurs or Robber Barons? • Journalists often described the 19th-century industrialists as “Robber Barons.” • The term was meant to be derogatory. • What did it imply? • Were they born into noble families? • Did they steal from consumers? • Did they steal from workers? • Were these men in any legitimate sense robber barons?

  22. Were the Robber Barons Born into Noble Families? • Young Andrew Carnegie was a penniless Scottish immigrant who began his work career as a bobbin boy in a textile factory. • Rockefeller was the son of a vagabond who sold questionable “elixirs” (magical or medicinal potions) door to door. • Rockefeller’s father was rarely around to care for his family. • Henry Ford was born on a farm in what is today Dearborn, Michigan. • His father was an immigrant from County Cork, Ireland, and his mother was the daughter of Belgian immigrants.

  23. Did the Robber Barons Steal from Consumers? • “In the fall of 1871…certain Pennsylvania refiners…brought [to Mr. Rockefeller and his friends] a remarkable scheme…to bring together secretly a large enough body of refiners and shippers and to [force] all the railroads handling oil to give the company formed special rates [discounts] on it’s oil and [to charge higher rates to others.] If they could get such rates it was clear that those outside the combination could not compete with them long, and that they would become eventually the only refiners. They could limit their output to actual demand and so keep prices up.” Ida Tarbell quoted in The Progressive Movement 1900-1915 edited by Richard Hofstader, Englewood Cliffs, NJ 1963.

  24. Did the Robber Barons Steal from Consumers? • “I ascribe the success of Standard Oil Company to its consistent policy of making the volume of its business large through the merit and cheapness of its products.” • “It has spared no expense in utilizing the best and most efficient methods of manufacture.” John D. Rockefeller, Random Reminiscences of Man and Events Doubleday & Company, 1909.

  25. John D. Rockefeller was accused of using a one, two punch to establish a monopoly in a particular region. Punch 1: Reduce oil prices in order to force the local competition out of business. Punch 2: Raise oil prices once control was achieved. The Logic of Monopoly Prices

  26. Punch 1 • Rockefeller sold below the costs of his competitors - - his costs were lower. • He did not sell below his costs. • This drove his competitors crazy. • Many competitors decided to sell out to him. • Some went out of business. • Competitors were hurt but were consumers hurt?

  27. Punch 2 • So… What happened to the price for oil from 1860-1900?

  28. PA Crude Oil Prices History from 1860-1900 Adjusted for Inflation

  29. Did the Robber Barons “Steal” from Employees?

  30. Life Was Rough for Workers • By today’s standards, life was rough in U.S. factories • Intense competition for unskilled job • Dangerous working conditions - - open furnaces, hot temperatures, dangerous chemicals, plenty of injuries. • Long hours • Child labor • But farming was no picnic either. Farming was the next best choice. • Farming had the highest injury rate of any industry - - people left when they saw a better chance.

  31. Did Living Standards Decline? • Did standards of living actually decline for working families?

  32. Real Annual Wages and Hours

  33. Life Expectancy in the United States Table 18-2 Walton and Rockhoff, History of the American Economy, South-Western Thomson Learning 2002

  34. Estimates of Unemployment During the 1890s Source: Romer, 1984

  35. ABC News: John Stossel Clip 3 • When Rockefeller and Vanderbilt earned millions of dollars from providing new goods and services, does this mean that the other Americans had less?

  36. ABC News: John Stossel Clip 3

  37. Invisible Hand? • Was the growth of big business in the late 19th century a case of Adam Smith’s invisible hand? • What is the metaphor of the invisible hand mean to convey? • Free markets - - allowing people to act in their own self-interest - - promotes positive social outcomes even those these are not intentional.

  38. John D. Rockefeller: What Was His Greatest Contribution? • Rockefeller was praised for his philanthropy. • Was this his most important economic contribution? • A case could be made that providing lower cost oil to consumers was his largest contribution.

  39. Questions

  40. Your Turn

  41. People make choices because they face scarcity. People’s choices involve costs - - opportunity cost People respond to incentives in predictable ways - - profits, self-interested behavior and competition People create economic systems - - rules of the game - - that influence individual choices and incentives. People gain when they trade voluntarily - - specialization People’s economic actions have primary effects and secondary effects. A Guide to Economic Reasoning

  42. Your Turn • Select one of the chapters we are not addressing today. • Select chapters following 9 but forget 15, 17, 19, 20, and 32. • Identity the principles of economic reasoning involved, explain the historical context, and discuss if this gives students an improved understanding of history.

  43. Where Did the Monopolies Go?

  44. Where Did the Monopolies Go? • The late nineteenth century was a time when business leaders used a variety of tactics to establish monopolies in many key industries. • Large trusts emerged in petroleum, cottonseed oil, whiskey, steel, sugar refining and tobacco. • TR was elected as a “trust buster.” • His administration filed 44 anti-trust law suits, but broke up only two • What happened to all the others? • Where did all the monopolies go?

  45. Big Businesses Seek to Form Monopolies • A monopoly is the power to dominate an industry. • A “pure monopoly” is an industry with one supplier, selling a unique product, in a market that is difficult to enter due to high start up costs or government rules. • Vertical Integration: Acquire all the resources all the chain of production: Andrew Carnegie. • Horizontal Integration: Consolidation lead by mergers: John D. Rockefeller. • Forming corporations and later trusts.

  46. A Monopoly: Bet You Can’t Keep One • Scene 1: Ms. Jane Morgan has a $100 bill which she says she will give to any class member for the highest individual bid. • Scene 2: Ms. Morgan leaves the room. Scott jumps to his feet and proposes that the class agree on one bid - - a penny for the $100 bill Let’s use the money for a class party. Heads nod. Everyone seems to agree.

  47. A Monopoly: Bet You Can’t Keep One • Scene 3: Ms. Morgan returns. She explains that each student may now submit a bid on a piece of paper. All bids will remain anonymous and completely confidential. The $100 bill will be given to the highest bidder after school, in secret. • Scene 4: Ms. Morgan collects the bids. • An assumption of economic thinking is that people respond to incentives in predictable ways. • What do you think will happen?

  48. Treaty of Titusville in 1872 • Rockefeller tried to get all the producers of oil in the area to stop drilling for an agreed upon period of time. • If they all stopped, they believed, they could force the price of oil to rise. • Prices did begin to rise. • But, producers in Clarion County, Pennsylvania, kept on drilling. • They were despised by the other producers. But they broke the trust, and prices of oil began to fall.

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